Bird strike / jet impact – solution concept plausibility question:

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A bird strike on an in-flight jet engine is likely to cause critical damage regardless of whether the engine is idle or active, as the high relative velocity between the aircraft and the bird diminishes any potential airflow benefits. The discussion highlights that turbine engines have inherent limitations in their acceleration and deceleration rates, making rapid engine adjustments impractical during flight. Even with advanced sensor technology capable of detecting imminent impacts, the physical constraints of jet propulsion systems prevent immediate response. Overall, the impact of bird strikes remains a significant concern for aviation safety, with little evidence to suggest that an idle engine would mitigate the risks. Understanding these dynamics is crucial for addressing bird strike incidents effectively.
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Would a bird strike impact with an in-flight jet propulsion intake have a significantly less probability of avoiding critical damage if the jet intake was fully idle or non-active at the point of impact?

Would the air-flow pattern of an abruptly idled engine perhaps even help by greatly increasing the likelihood that the bird might be forced harmlessly around the engine instead of inexorably through it as one would obviously expect when such an engine is active?

Assuming that the computer based sensor and control technologies existed today that could detect an imminent small object impact within a second or at least a fraction of a second warning, are there basic jet propulsion system limitations that make fully starting or stopping such an engine in-flight in such a manner impossible?

I’m no rocket scientist and I’ve not studied physics. Even beginning to assess or calculate the factors involved in any of these sorts of questions are well beyond me, but hopefully this is a welcome and appropriate forum for such questions (otherwise, please forgive me as I’ve just newly stumbled upon this forum).
 
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Overall, turbine engines can not accelerate at those kinds of rates. There is a finite spool up and spool down rate because of the rotating mass.

As far as the airflow question, it would be negligible because the relative velocity between the aircraft and the bird are so high.
 
Due to the constant never ending supply of "cool stuff" happening in Aerospace these days I'm creating this thread to consolidate posts every time something new comes along. Please feel free to add random information if its relevant. So to start things off here is the SpaceX Dragon launch coming up shortly, I'll be following up afterwards to see how it all goes. :smile: https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacex/

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